Obi of Onitsha takes love for art to new heights with world-class museum
It is no longer news that the Obi of Onitsha, Igwe Nnaemeka Alfred
Achebe is endlessly in love with the arts. So much is the love for art
works that he has been seen at not a few exhibitions in the past, some
of which he has supported or sponsored. What is news, however, is that
the revered monarch has commenced the process of building a world-class
museum in his domain mainly for the promotion of African art as a key
development resource.
At the groundbreaking ceremony of the project, performed recently in Onitsha by the Governor of Anambra State, Willie Obiano, the influential royal father disclosed that the world-class museum will be named after his direct royal ancestor – Chimedie.
The Chimedie Museum in Onitsha is to serve as a centre of excellence for the development and promotion of African art and is also meant to help create a future in which African art achieves greater relevance and sustainability such that it will become a key development resource.
The monarch, who marked his 75th birthday and 14th anniversary on the throne on the same day, said the museum is a private endowment by him but for the benefit of the public. Designed by Theo Lawson, the architect who responsible for the design of the Freedom Park, as the former colonial prison in Ikoyi, Lagos is now known, the museum will hold the monarch’s personal collection of modern African artworks numbering over 1200 presently time, all his royal paraphernalia and those of his predecessors that may be available including photographs, music and video recordings, apparels, jewellery and ornaments as well as historic documents and research materials, including the digital copies of the entire academic materials built up by Prof Richard and Dr. Mrs Helen Henderso, who devoted their entire academic life to the socio-anthropological study of Onitsha.
Speaking at the launch, the Obi of Onitsha said the museum would make Onitsha and the entire Anambra State a destination of choice for business, tourism and leisure.
“It is our intent to build an edifice, which will become a reference centre for our history and culture, relating the past with the present for the benefit of the future. For instance, it is from the hundreds of museums around the world that we derive most of our knowledge about life in ancient Egypt, Greece, the Roman Empire, China, India, and Nigeria, among the world’s great civilisations.
“The big difference with Nigeria is that we have not cared to preserve our heritage, the best of which now reside in foreign museums, where we and our future generations will painfully visit if we must know about our past. Today’s event is the beginning of a private journey to reverse that trend for Onitsha Ado N’Idu, Anambra State and, to some extent, Nigeria.
“The museum that we are about to launch today is named after Obi Chimedie, my direct royal ancestor. Chimedie was the son of Eze Aroli, who was the son of Obi Chimaevi, who was the son of Ezechima, the founding father of Onitsha Ado N’Idu. My more immediate ancestor, Orezeobi, was the first son of Chimedie,” he said
He noted that the Chimedie Museum Trust Foundation had been duly registered with the Corporate Affairs Commission as a not-for-profit independent trust with a board of trustees to be duly constituted soon.
He also said the land for the museum had been allocated in his name by the state government and he had executed an irrevocable Deed of Gift conveying the land to the Chimedie Museum Trust Foundation. He added that the museum will be a centre for education and enlightenment on the history and culture of Igboland.
“The museum will in due course be linked with one of our universities and become a Centre for Onitsha and Igbo Studies. Our daughter and distinguished academic, Prof Nkiru Nzegwu, of the State University of New York in Binghamton, New York has painstakingly built up a bibliography of over 500 sources of published materials on Onitsha and related subjects. The museum will equally acquire such materials over time to become a research centre,” he said.
Governor Obiano, who performed the foundation-laying ceremony, hailed the initiative, noting that the museum will help his administration in its bid to develop tourism in the state.
The new museum is the second of such being built by individuals in Nigeria. Last year, the Omooba Yemisi Adedoyin Shyllon Foundation, founded by famous art patron and lover of art, Prince Yemisi Shyllon, donated 1,200 artworks and seed money worth over N2.2 billion to the Pan Atlantic University, Lagos.
Obi of Onitsha and others looking at the prototype of Chimedie Museum Rousing performance in Abuja brings global tour of Hear Word! to an end
After what is deemed a successful tour of locations in the United States and Europe, the episodic stage play, Hear Word! which highlights issues holding Nigerian women back from reaching their full potentials, recently held Abuja spell-bound.
The play’s command performance in Abuja was the climax of a thrilling three-continent tour which kicked off in April at Harvard University, before performances at Torp Theatre - Central Connecticut State University also in the USA before moving to the Frascati Theatre in Amsterdam, Holland.
At the Congress Hall of Transcorp Hilton Hotel, Abuja, Hear Word! attracted eminent guests led by the wife of the Vice President, Dolapo Osinbajo, chairman of Etisalat Nigeria, Hakeem Belo-Osagie and his wife, Myma and patron of the Etisalat Prize for Literature, Dele Olojede. Others include Mrs. Gimbiya Yakubu Dogara; Mrs. Oby Ezekwesili and wives of service chiefs including Mrs. Omobolanle Olonisakin; Mrs. Theresa Ibass; Mrs. Sadique Abubakar, Mrs. Agharase Arase, among others.
Produced and directed by Ifeoma Fafunwa, Hear Word! features star figures like Taiwo Ajai-Lycett, Joke Silva, Bimbo Akintola, Omonor, Elvina Ibru, Ufuoma McDermott, Zara Udofia, Rita Edward, Debbie Ohiri and Odenike, the stage drama features a collection of 10 stories of real life accounts of inequality, discrimination, abuse and violence, and other social, cultural, traditional, economic and political manifestations and practices of the society which limit women from reaching their full potentials and becoming meaningful contributors to the development of the society.
It is an advocacy piece of performance that uses artistry, social commentary and humour to tell real life stories of issues affecting the lives of women across Nigeria and also examines factors that limit their potential for independence and leadership.
Speaking at the occasion, Etisalat Nigeria’s Director, Brands and Experience, Elvis Ogiemwanye, said Hear Word! captures in part the company’s vision of creating and supporting platforms that empower people to discover themselves and reach their full potentials.
“We are an innovative and expressive company and are delighted to have pulled this through with the Hear Word! team. We share in the everyday experiences of our customers, and also seek for appropriate channels to create desirable experiences for them. We believe in providing people the opportunities to express themselves, be it in innovation, music, sports, literature, photography, theatre arts, education, entrepreneurship and any other way we can contribute to the development of the society,” he said.
At the groundbreaking ceremony of the project, performed recently in Onitsha by the Governor of Anambra State, Willie Obiano, the influential royal father disclosed that the world-class museum will be named after his direct royal ancestor – Chimedie.
The Chimedie Museum in Onitsha is to serve as a centre of excellence for the development and promotion of African art and is also meant to help create a future in which African art achieves greater relevance and sustainability such that it will become a key development resource.
The monarch, who marked his 75th birthday and 14th anniversary on the throne on the same day, said the museum is a private endowment by him but for the benefit of the public. Designed by Theo Lawson, the architect who responsible for the design of the Freedom Park, as the former colonial prison in Ikoyi, Lagos is now known, the museum will hold the monarch’s personal collection of modern African artworks numbering over 1200 presently time, all his royal paraphernalia and those of his predecessors that may be available including photographs, music and video recordings, apparels, jewellery and ornaments as well as historic documents and research materials, including the digital copies of the entire academic materials built up by Prof Richard and Dr. Mrs Helen Henderso, who devoted their entire academic life to the socio-anthropological study of Onitsha.
Speaking at the launch, the Obi of Onitsha said the museum would make Onitsha and the entire Anambra State a destination of choice for business, tourism and leisure.
“It is our intent to build an edifice, which will become a reference centre for our history and culture, relating the past with the present for the benefit of the future. For instance, it is from the hundreds of museums around the world that we derive most of our knowledge about life in ancient Egypt, Greece, the Roman Empire, China, India, and Nigeria, among the world’s great civilisations.
“The big difference with Nigeria is that we have not cared to preserve our heritage, the best of which now reside in foreign museums, where we and our future generations will painfully visit if we must know about our past. Today’s event is the beginning of a private journey to reverse that trend for Onitsha Ado N’Idu, Anambra State and, to some extent, Nigeria.
“The museum that we are about to launch today is named after Obi Chimedie, my direct royal ancestor. Chimedie was the son of Eze Aroli, who was the son of Obi Chimaevi, who was the son of Ezechima, the founding father of Onitsha Ado N’Idu. My more immediate ancestor, Orezeobi, was the first son of Chimedie,” he said
He noted that the Chimedie Museum Trust Foundation had been duly registered with the Corporate Affairs Commission as a not-for-profit independent trust with a board of trustees to be duly constituted soon.
He also said the land for the museum had been allocated in his name by the state government and he had executed an irrevocable Deed of Gift conveying the land to the Chimedie Museum Trust Foundation. He added that the museum will be a centre for education and enlightenment on the history and culture of Igboland.
“The museum will in due course be linked with one of our universities and become a Centre for Onitsha and Igbo Studies. Our daughter and distinguished academic, Prof Nkiru Nzegwu, of the State University of New York in Binghamton, New York has painstakingly built up a bibliography of over 500 sources of published materials on Onitsha and related subjects. The museum will equally acquire such materials over time to become a research centre,” he said.
Governor Obiano, who performed the foundation-laying ceremony, hailed the initiative, noting that the museum will help his administration in its bid to develop tourism in the state.
The new museum is the second of such being built by individuals in Nigeria. Last year, the Omooba Yemisi Adedoyin Shyllon Foundation, founded by famous art patron and lover of art, Prince Yemisi Shyllon, donated 1,200 artworks and seed money worth over N2.2 billion to the Pan Atlantic University, Lagos.
Obi of Onitsha and others looking at the prototype of Chimedie Museum Rousing performance in Abuja brings global tour of Hear Word! to an end
After what is deemed a successful tour of locations in the United States and Europe, the episodic stage play, Hear Word! which highlights issues holding Nigerian women back from reaching their full potentials, recently held Abuja spell-bound.
The play’s command performance in Abuja was the climax of a thrilling three-continent tour which kicked off in April at Harvard University, before performances at Torp Theatre - Central Connecticut State University also in the USA before moving to the Frascati Theatre in Amsterdam, Holland.
At the Congress Hall of Transcorp Hilton Hotel, Abuja, Hear Word! attracted eminent guests led by the wife of the Vice President, Dolapo Osinbajo, chairman of Etisalat Nigeria, Hakeem Belo-Osagie and his wife, Myma and patron of the Etisalat Prize for Literature, Dele Olojede. Others include Mrs. Gimbiya Yakubu Dogara; Mrs. Oby Ezekwesili and wives of service chiefs including Mrs. Omobolanle Olonisakin; Mrs. Theresa Ibass; Mrs. Sadique Abubakar, Mrs. Agharase Arase, among others.
Produced and directed by Ifeoma Fafunwa, Hear Word! features star figures like Taiwo Ajai-Lycett, Joke Silva, Bimbo Akintola, Omonor, Elvina Ibru, Ufuoma McDermott, Zara Udofia, Rita Edward, Debbie Ohiri and Odenike, the stage drama features a collection of 10 stories of real life accounts of inequality, discrimination, abuse and violence, and other social, cultural, traditional, economic and political manifestations and practices of the society which limit women from reaching their full potentials and becoming meaningful contributors to the development of the society.
It is an advocacy piece of performance that uses artistry, social commentary and humour to tell real life stories of issues affecting the lives of women across Nigeria and also examines factors that limit their potential for independence and leadership.
Speaking at the occasion, Etisalat Nigeria’s Director, Brands and Experience, Elvis Ogiemwanye, said Hear Word! captures in part the company’s vision of creating and supporting platforms that empower people to discover themselves and reach their full potentials.
“We are an innovative and expressive company and are delighted to have pulled this through with the Hear Word! team. We share in the everyday experiences of our customers, and also seek for appropriate channels to create desirable experiences for them. We believe in providing people the opportunities to express themselves, be it in innovation, music, sports, literature, photography, theatre arts, education, entrepreneurship and any other way we can contribute to the development of the society,” he said.
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